737 Radiocarbon and Dendrochronological

737 Radiocarbon and Dendrochronological

Radiocarbon and Dendrochronological Dates of the Corded Ware Culture Item Type Article; text Authors Włodarczak, Piotr Citation Włodarczak, P. (2009). Radiocarbon and dendrochronological dates of the Corded Ware culture. Radiocarbon, 51(2), 737-749. DOI 10.1017/S003382220005606X Publisher Department of Geosciences, The University of Arizona Journal Radiocarbon Rights Copyright © by the Arizona Board of Regents on behalf of the University of Arizona. All rights reserved. Download date 28/09/2021 06:23:30 Item License http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ Version Final published version Link to Item http://hdl.handle.net/10150/654291 RADIOCARBON, Vol 51, Nr 2, 2009, p 737–749 © 2009 by the Arizona Board of Regents on behalf of the University of Arizona RADIOCARBON AND DENDROCHRONOLOGICAL DATES OF THE CORDED WARE CULTURE Piotr W≥odarczak Instytut Archeologii i Etnologii PAN, ul. S≥awkowska 17, 31-016 Kraków, Poland. Email: [email protected]. ABSTRACT. This paper presents and discusses radiocarbon dates of the Corded Ware culture (CWC) from different regions of Europe (mainly from southern and central Germany and southern and central Poland). The main questions addressed are the controversial significance of particular results, the incompatibility of the obtained date sequences, and the “imprecision of the method.” There is clearly the problem of hundreds of dates from different laboratories and performed in different years. A slight difference in the results leads to an “elongated” chronology and acceptance of a model with synchronicity of many cultural groups. The proposed verification of the 14C chronology is connected with both the dendrochronological method and the comparison of dating sequences obtained from particular regions. At present, the most reliable dating scheme for the Corded Ware culture is the one based on the dendrochronological dates of settlements on Swiss lakes; therefore, the scheme must constitute a reference point for 14C analyses conducted for other regions. Due to the typological diversity of materials, however, not every situation allows for this approach. Thus, many 14C grave dates, particularly the results referring to the late CWC phase (after ~2400 BC), remain controversial. INTRODUCTION The Corded Ware culture radiocarbon dates are numerous and come from many regions in central, northern, and eastern Europe. Generally, they refer to the 3rd millennium BC. Although their number gradually increases every year, there is only 1 up-to-date discussion of the matter, summa- rized in the work by Furholt (2003), concerning the issue of absolute dating of particular regional groups of the Corded Ware culture. The work quoted here is an example of an attitude towards 14C method, assuming the possibility of establishing a detailed chronological division within the culture. 14C dates may be helpful in building a dispersion pattern of certain cultural features determining the substance of the Corded Ware culture (CWC), e.g. pottery (e.g. Furholt 2004). Reconstructions using 14C dates to construct a chronological division of the CWC have already been presented at the time when non-calibrated markings were used (e.g. Lanting and van der Waals 1976; Breunig 1987). There are other reconstructions, however, which do not share such a great optimism. They raise the issue of the controversial significance of particular results, the incompatibility of the obtained date sequences, and ultimately the “imprecision of the method.” Undoubtedly, verification of the method, which is still employed too rarely, is a helpful means for solving the problems encountered. Examples of such a verification are presented below. They are connected with both the dendro- chronological method and the comparison of dating sequences obtained from particular regions. The correctness of chronological models based on 14C dating can presently be verified only by means of dendrochronology. This is possible only for the finds from Switzerland and partly for those from southern Germany. While comparing the results obtained via the 2 methods, there is a danger of making a simple generalization of a cultural model from 1 region onto all the remaining ones. Another obvious drawback is the homogeneity of the dated materials from palafitte settlements, par- ticularly those strongly affected by climatic changes. As a result, a chronological sequence based on dendrochronology consists of the accumulated dates and occurring in between, a sometimes quite long hiatus. 14C dates coming from different regions, different sites, and different environments can represent a more complete chronological spectrum. These differences between 14C and dendrochro- nological dating must be taken into account. However, there are also reasons why it is worth com- paring the 2 methods. The first, and by far the most important, one is the fact that dendrochronology is much more precise. Apart from that, the above-mentioned territory of Switzerland and southern © 2009 by the Arizona Board of Regents on behalf of the University of Arizona Proceedings of the 5th International 14C and Archaeology Symposium, edited by Irka Hajdas et al. RADIOCARBON, Vol 51, Nr 2, 2009, p 737–749 737 738 P W≥odarczak Germany belongs to a wider circle of central and northern European territories, whose general model of cultural development has been established via the typological methods of relative chronol- ogy (e.g. Strahm 1992). Before dendrochronology was employed, the chronological models from territories adjacent to the Alps did not differ from the suggestions for other regions, and very often they simply corresponded to them (e.g. Strahm 1971). Since the image obtained for Switzerland by means of dendrochronology in many places led to a revision of the prior reconstructions based on comparative typology and 14C dating, an important problem emerges. Should we also expect a sim- ilar revision for other territories of Europe when we apply a new, more precise dating method? DENDROCHRONOLOGICAL DATING OF THE CORDED WARE SETTLEMENT IN EASTERN SWITZERLAND The chronology of all the Corded Ware culture (CWC) phases based on dendrochronology has been completed only for the territory of Switzerland (e.g. Gross-Klee and Eberli 1997; Hardmeyer 1993; Winiger 1993; W≥odarczak 2007). The data from Germany are still insufficient and can only play an auxiliary role. As a model territory for our analysis, the region of Zurich was chosen, namely the palafittes on the lake of Zurich, the Greifensee, and the Pfäffikersee (W≥odarczak 2007). The data from other parts of Switzerland, and particularly from the Three Lakes region in western Switzer- land, confirm the results obtained for the region of Zurich. The latter territory was singled out not only because of a large number of dendrochronological dates, but also because of the clarity of the stratigraphic layers and the abundance of the finds, allowing us to construct the most complete typo- logical and chronological sequence of cultural changes. This model is based on the excavations con- ducted in Zurich, Kanalisationssanierung and Zurich, Mozartstrasse (Bleuer et al. 1993; Gerber et al. 1994; Gross et al. 1987; Hardmeyer 1993; Schibler et al. 1997). It was there that the groups of layers dated, respectively, to the early and middle phases of the CWC were documented. Due to the dynamics of erosion processes occurring in the 26th and 25th century BC, no equally abundant finds from the younger CWC phase have been discovered. At present, the oldest dated site is Zurich, Wol- lishofen “Strandbad” (Hardmeyer and Ruoff 1983; de Capitani 1993). A short series of dendrochro- nological dates, insufficient for a more precise dating, shows that those finds ought to be dated to before 2725 BC. However, there is no convincing evidence of the occurrence of CWC characteris- tics as early as the first half of the 28th century BC; on the other hand, the youngest date of a cut- down tree from the region of Zurich, coming from Wädenswil, Vorder Au, is 2426 BC (Ebersch- weiler 1999:48). A little younger dendrochronological date (2418 BC) comes from Ludwigshafen, Seehalde in the region of Lake Constance (Schlichtherle 1991:66–7). Therefore, the period of devel- opment of the CWC falls between ~350–300 yr (maximum about 2750–2400 BC). It must be emphasized here that the Swiss finds generally correspond to all the main stages in the development of the CWC in other regions of Europe. This has been repeatedly discussed by the archaeologists dealing with the typological analysis of the finds, particularly by Strahm (1971, 1992). The decline of the CWC settlement in Switzerland is clearly marked by the disappearance of settlements on the lakes and the appearance of the Bell Beaker culture. Another important characteristic of the late Neolithic in Switzerland is that the image of the cultural phenomena in the region of Zurich differs from that of the Auvernier-Cordé group in western Switzerland. On the former territory, there is clearly a time gap between the oldest dates of the CWC and the chronology of the hitherto known assemblages of the older culture group. That is why the stylistic and typological differences between the CWC finds and those of the Horgen culture are so clearly marked. On the other hand, in western Switzerland there is a problem with drawing a clear boundary in the series of dendrochronological dates, and determining precisely the beginning of the Auvernier-Cordé phase. It can be seen, for example, in the sites in Saint-Blaise, Bains-des-Dames (Michel 2002), Delley-Portalban II (Ram- 14C & Dendrochronological Dates of Corded Ware Culture 739 seyer 1988), and in Yverdon-les-Bains, Avenue des Sports (Wolf 1993). As a result, we observe the appearance of new CWC characteristics in the finds of the Lüscherz group. The regions of Zurich and of the Three Lakes, therefore, represent 2 models of relations between the finds of the older and younger culture units, and the observed differences directly result from the conditions created by the obtained absolute chronology dates.

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